Research article - (2012)11, 695 - 702 |
In Vivo Kinematics of the Anterior Cruciate Ligament Deficient Knee During Wide-Based Squat Using a 2D/3D Registration Technique |
Takeshi Miyaji1,, Kazuyoshi Gamada2, Kenichi Kidera1, Futoshi Ikuta2, Kei Yoneta3, Hiroyuki Shindo1, Makoto Osaki1, Akihiko Yonekura1 |
Key words: 2D/3D registration technique, anterior cruciate ligament deficient knee, in vivo knee kinematics, wide-based squat activity. |
Key Points |
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Materials |
This study is a laboratory-based, cross-sectional study. The study protocol was approved by a local institutional review board. Subjects were recruited from patients visiting our hospital. Selection criteria included (1) males aged over 20 years old, (2) unilateral, isolated ACLD confirmed by MRI, (3) signs of knee instability by manual physical examinations, (4) symptoms of knee instability during daily activities, (5) no evidence of past knee injuries except for the ACL injury, (6) over 100 degrees range of motion (ROM) arc in bilateral knees during squat, (7) no previous injury or OA changes in the contralateral knee, and (8) written informed consent. Females were not enrolled in this study to avoid radiation exposures for potentially pregnant women. Thirty-three patients aged 29.2 ± 7.9 years (range 20-51 years) with unilateral ACLD and contralateral intact knees were enrolled in this study. The mean term between the ACL injury and the testing was 47.4 weeks (range 3.3 - 450 weeks, median ten weeks). Full passive knee range of motion arc and resolution of knee swelling were achieved for all subjects before testing began. All of the ACLD knees underwent ACL reconstruction following data acquisition due to persistent severe knee instability. All had a positive Lachman test, 31 knees had positive pivot-shift tests, and none had radiographic OA changes. All subjects were examined with anterior-drawer test using a KT- 2000 arthrometer (MEDmetric Corp, San Diego, California) under anesthesia during the ACL reconstruction surgery. Anterior laxity ranged from 13.1 ± 2.3 mm in the ACLD knees to 7.3 ± 2.1 mm in the contralateral non-involved knees. There was a significant difference (p < 0.001, Student’s t-test). |
Overview of analysis |
Knee kinematics were analyzed using the 2D/3D registration technique utilizing CT scan and lateral fluoroscopy proposed by Banks et al. (Banks and Hodge, |
Activity and fluoroscopic imaging |
The wide-based squat ( The fluoroscopy unit (Shimadzu, Cvision Safire, Kyoto, Japan) used in this study was equipped with a square, 17-inch flat-panel screen. The imaging frame rate was at 5 Hz and the image size was 1024 × 1024 pixels. Fluoroscopic surveillance was performed for only one squat cycle for the sake of minimal radiation exposure. The above one cycle means movement from maximal extension to maximal flexion and then returning to maximal extension. The kinematic data during squat involved flexion and extension phases which were analyzed separately. Our validation study revealed that our techniques for embedding the femoral and tibial coordinate systems are highly repeatable. Intra-researcher root mean square (RMS) of the translations/rotations was less than 0.5 mm/0.75 degrees for the femur and less than 0.4 mm/0.6 degrees for the tibia. Inter-researcher RMS of the translations/rotations was less than 0.5 mm/1.1 degrees for the femur and less than 1.1 mm/1.3 degrees for the tibia (Ikuta, |
Bone-model preparations |
All knees underwent CT (Siemens, SOMATOM Definition, Germany) scanning with a 0.5 mm slice pitch spanning approximately 150 mm above and below the knee joint line. Geometric bone models of the femur and tibia were created from the CT images. Exterior cortical bone edges were segmented using 3D-Doctor software (Able Software Corp., Lexington, MA) and were converted into polygonal surface models using Geomagic Studio software (Geomagic, Research Triangle Park, NC, USA). Local coordinate systems were embedded in each bone using the custom VHKneeFitter program (University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Aurora, Co) that allows all the procedures detailed below to be performed in a virtual space with high reproducibility. The cylindrical axis (CA) (Eckhoff et al., The tibial coordinate system was defined around a virtual rectangle fitted onto the contour of the tibial plateau. The rectangle was fitted at the level of the top of the fibular head parallel to the tibial plateau plane in order to avoid fitting onto highly variable morphology at the posterior contour of the tibial plateau. The four lines of the rectangle were fitted onto (1) the co-tangent of the posterior contours of the medial and lateral tibial condyles, (2) the medial tangent of the medial tibial condyle, (3) the lateral tangent of the lateral tibial condyle, and (4) the anterior tangent of the medial tibial condyle. Then, the rectangle was translated superiorly so that it fitted the bottoms of both tibial plateaus. The center of the rectangle was defined as the tibial origin, through which the medial/lateral and anteroposterior axes were defined as two axes of the tibial coordinate system. The vertical axis of the tibia was, by definition, the cross product of these two axes proximally ( |
Model registration and data processing |
In vivo three dimensional femoral and tibial positions and orientations were determined using a 2D/3D registration technique (Banks and Hodge, Six degrees-of-freedom (DOF) joint kinematics were computed using the 3D-JointManager commercial software (GLAB Inc., Higashi-Hiroshima, Japan) once the registration procedures were completed for the activity sequence. The joint coordinate system utilized in this software was based on the projection angles of the fixed tibial coordinate system (Andriacchi et al., |
Statistical analyses |
Statistical analyses for kinematic data were performed using the Student’s t-test, repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) and post-hoc pair-wise comparison (Tukey Kramer test) to compare between the two groups. The level of significance was set at p < 0.05. Statcel-The Useful Addin Forms on Excel-2nd ed. (The Publisher OMS Ltd., Saitama, Japan) and G*Power ver. 3 (University of Kiel, Kiel, Germany) were used to complete a power analysis. The effect size was set at 0.33 estimated from our preliminary study using ten ACLD knees. The sample size necessary for achieving alpha = 0.05 and beta = 0.20 was 26. |
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Tibial rotation |
Tibial translation |
Medial contact point |
Lateral contact point |
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We hypothesized that there were different knee kinematics at low flexion angles between the ACLD and contralateral intact knees during a wide-based squat activity. The results of this study were consistent with our hypothesis. Significant differences were detected at 0 and 5° flexion in tibial anterior/posterior translation, at 5, 10 and 15° of knee flexion in the contact points on the medial tibial plateau in the extension phase, and at 0° flexion in the contact points on the lateral tibial plateau. The ACLD knees demonstrated a smaller magnitude of anterior/posterior translation of the lateral contact points in the extension phase than that of the contralateral knees ( The kinematic differences at low flexion angles observed in this study were consistent with previous reports. Van de Velde et al. (Van De Velde et al., Strength in internal validity should be pointed out. The 2D/3D registration technique using lateral fluoroscopy or radiography is a well-established measurement method of in vivo dynamic weight-bearing knee kinematics with standard errors within 2.2 mm for translations and 1.8 degrees for rotation (Banks and Hodge). The wide-based squat, with greater area of support, should reduce loading pattern variability and relative pelvic positions and therefore should improve knee kinematic consistency, providing greater sensitivity to detect small kinematic changes. Moreover, knee kinematics were computed based on the bony coordinate systems that had been assigned using a software program specially coded for assigning femoral and tibial coordinate systems with high reproducibility. Errors caused by potential morphological variations should have been significantly diminished by using the CA for the femur and the posterior co-tangent of both tibial condyles at the top of the fibular head for the tibia as reference lines for knee rotation. The data presented in this study should be reliable with good internal validity. Several issues should be pointed out regarding external validity. Knee kinematics observed in this study should be activity specific, and should not be generalized to the other activities such as gait. Andriacchi and Dyrby (Andriacchi and Dyrby, Sufficient statistical power, accurate analyses, and reproducible activity are strengths of this study. However, there are several limitations in this study. First, the 2D/3D registration method using single-plane fluoroscopy provides limited measurement accuracy for out-of-plane motions (Moro-Oka et al., |
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In conclusion, knee kinematics between the ACLD and contralateral intact knees are similar during a wide-based squat activity except at the low knee flexion angles. This further indicates that this activity is recommended for ACLD knees during pre-operative rehabilitation and potentially during the early post-operative phase as well. This should be validated in future studies. This research project is part of a series which has currently been extended to open chain knee extension and kneeling and the results will be reported shortly. We also have been gathering patients with long-term-ACLD knees and OA changes, and hope that our series of studies can help reveal the process of OA changes in ACLD knees. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
This work was supported, in part, by Arthrex inc. and Minato Medical Science Co. Ltd. We thank Scott Banks, PhD (University of Florida) for significant academic and technical supports including providing the JointTrack program. We also appreciate the considerable technical support given by the radiology technicians in our hospital. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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REFERENCES |
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